scholarly journals Enhancing the Validity and Cross-Cultural Comparability of Measurement in Survey Research

Author(s):  
Gary King ◽  
Christopher J. L. Murray ◽  
Joshua A. Salomon ◽  
Ajay Tandon
Author(s):  
Jose-Luis Padilla ◽  
Isabel Benitez ◽  
Fons J.R. van de Vijver

1993 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 344-365 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy Dunnigan ◽  
Miles McNall ◽  
Jeylan T. Mortimer

Author(s):  
Simon Haddad

A principal goal of this study has been to assess the impact of social distance on attitudes towards Palestinian resettlement using comprehensive cross-cultural survey research. The results are clear and consistent for all Lebanese sub-groups. Social distance is a significant predictor of attitudes toward resettlement for all six sub-groups examined. Specifically, social distance is inversely and consistently associated with unfavorable attitudes toward the prospect of the permanent settlement of Palestinian refugees in Lebanon. These findings indicate on one hand, that the majority of Sunnis and Druze respondents endorse communal ties with Palestinians and approve their permanent economic, social and political integration. However, social distance influence political attitudes toward Palestinian resettlement, namely in the case of Christian and Shii groups. Hence, for most Lebanese the question is about their own political survival not Palestinian resettlement If the actual perceptions stand, resettlement will create a potential for communal conflict and will affect the social cohesion of the society.


2004 ◽  
Vol 98 (1) ◽  
pp. 191-207 ◽  
Author(s):  
GARY KING ◽  
CHRISTOPHER J. L. MURRAY ◽  
JOSHUA A. SALOMON ◽  
AJAY TANDON

We address two long-standing survey research problems: measuring complicated concepts, such as political freedom and efficacy, that researchers define best with reference to examples; and what to do when respondents interpret identical questions in different ways. Scholars have long addressed these problems with approaches to reduce incomparability, such as writing more concrete questions—with uneven success. Our alternative is to measure directly response category incomparability and to correct for it. We measure incomparability via respondents' assessments, on the same scale as the self-assessments to be corrected, of hypothetical individuals described in short vignettes. Because the actual (but not necessarily reported) levels of the vignettes are invariant over respondents, variability in vignette answers reveals incomparability. Our corrections require either simple recodes or a statistical model designed to save survey administration costs. With analysis, simulations, and cross-national surveys, we show how response incomparability can drastically mislead survey researchers and how our approach can alleviate this problem.


2003 ◽  
Vol 97 (4) ◽  
pp. 567-583 ◽  
Author(s):  
GARY KING ◽  
CHRISTOPHER J. L. MURRAY ◽  
JOSHUA A. SALOMON ◽  
AJAY TANDON

We address two long-standing survey research problems: measuring complicated concepts, such as political freedom and efficacy, that researchers define best with reference to examples; and what to do when respondents interpret identical questions in different ways. Scholars have long addressed these problems with approaches to reduce incomparability, such as writing more concrete questions—with uneven success. Our alternative is to measure directly response category incomparability and to correct for it. We measure incomparability via respondents' assessments, on the same scale as the self-assessments to be corrected, of hypothetical individuals described in short vignettes. Because the actual (but not necessarily reported) levels of the vignettes are invariant over respondents, variability in vignette answers reveals incomparability. Our corrections require either simple recodes or a statistical model designed to save survey administration costs. With analysis, simulations, and cross-national surveys, we show how response incomparability can drastically mislead survey researchers and how our approach can alleviate this problem.


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